Today, I had a grammar headache. I wrote on a students work "Your grammar and spelling is very good". Then I backtracked, and changed it to "are". Then I faintly recalled being taught that it was indeed "is" by a grammar book.
So, is it "Your spelling and grammar is very good"
or
"Your spelling and grammar are very good"
I think it should be 'is'.
Two singulars connected by 'and'?
Moderator: Joe
Re: Two singulars connected by 'and'?
spelling -> itjazzbrat wrote:Today, I had a grammar headache. I wrote on a students work "Your grammar and spelling is very good". Then I backtracked, and changed it to "are". Then I faintly recalled being taught that it was indeed "is" by a grammar book.
So, is it "Your spelling and grammar is very good"
or
"Your spelling and grammar are very good"
I think it should be 'is'.
grammar -> it
it + it = they
Which verb do you use with they, is or are?
Of course "are".
However, when you type in "Your logic and reasoning is" on google, you get over 800 results. If you do the same using "are", you get around 300.
It seems that if the two singular nouns are commonly thought of as being a unit, such as logic and reasoning, or spelling and grammar, it seems to take "is".
Does anyone else have any knowledge of this?
However, when you type in "Your logic and reasoning is" on google, you get over 800 results. If you do the same using "are", you get around 300.
It seems that if the two singular nouns are commonly thought of as being a unit, such as logic and reasoning, or spelling and grammar, it seems to take "is".
Does anyone else have any knowledge of this?
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Re: Two singulars connected by 'and'?
There is milk and butter ... .
There are carrots and butter ...
- the proximity rule works.
But: Milk and butter are essential products.
Because 'milk' and 'butter' are two independent entities.
Cf.: Fish and chips is my favourite dish.
'Fish and chips' is understood as a single whole.
There are carrots and butter ...
- the proximity rule works.
But: Milk and butter are essential products.
Because 'milk' and 'butter' are two independent entities.
Cf.: Fish and chips is my favourite dish.
'Fish and chips' is understood as a single whole.
Re: Two singulars connected by 'and'?
If you didn't notice, all the "are"s were countables. Uncountables and mixed countable/uncountable used "There is".matthau wrote:There is milk and butter ... .
There are carrots and butter ...
- the proximity rule works.
But: Milk and butter are essential products.
Because 'milk' and 'butter' are two independent entities.
Cf.: Fish and chips is my favourite dish.
'Fish and chips' is understood as a single whole.
Re: Two singulars connected by 'and'?
You need to distinguish between the constructions:
(1) A + B is/are C
(2) There is/are A + B
because different rules for subject - predicate agreement work.
In (1) the criterion is whether A + B can be understood as a single unit or not. Depending upon that you choose the form of the predicate verb.
In (2) the proximity rule works, i.e. the predicate verb agrees with the nearest subject noun.
Cf.: There is milk and carrots ...
There are carrots and milk ...
About the original message:
I think, 'Your spelling and grammar are ...'
Though, some peolpe may say that spelling is part of grammar. Then the phrase sounds as ridiculous as 'Your cheeks and face are pale'. If we substitute, say, 'vocabulary' for 'spelling', the phrase would be absolutely correct.
(1) A + B is/are C
(2) There is/are A + B
because different rules for subject - predicate agreement work.
In (1) the criterion is whether A + B can be understood as a single unit or not. Depending upon that you choose the form of the predicate verb.
In (2) the proximity rule works, i.e. the predicate verb agrees with the nearest subject noun.
Cf.: There is milk and carrots ...
There are carrots and milk ...
About the original message:
I think, 'Your spelling and grammar are ...'
Though, some peolpe may say that spelling is part of grammar. Then the phrase sounds as ridiculous as 'Your cheeks and face are pale'. If we substitute, say, 'vocabulary' for 'spelling', the phrase would be absolutely correct.